Effects of aging on the precedence effect in sound localization

No Thumbnail Available
Authors
Cranford, Jerry L.
Boose, Martha
Moore, Christopher A.
Advisors
Issue Date
1990-12
Type
Article
Keywords
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Journal of speech and hearing research. 1990 Dec; 33(4): 654-9.
Abstract

The precedence effect in sound localization can be evoked by presenting identical sounds (e.g., clicks) from pairs of loudspeakers placed on opposite sides of a subject's head. With appropriate inter-loudspeaker delays, normal subjects perceive a fused image originating from the side of the leading loudspeaker. Separate tests at loudspeaker delays ranging from 0 to 8 ms were presented to groups of young and elderly subjects. At 0 ms delay, young subjects perceived the fused image to be located halfway between the loudspeakers; at progressively longer delays, the image was perceived closer to the leading loudspeaker. Significant numbers of elderly subjects exhibited discrimination difficulties with delays below 0.7 ms.

Table of Contents
Description
Click on the link below to access the electronic version of the article (may not be free). Check the journal record http://libcat.wichita.edu/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=477119 for the paper version of the article in the library.
Publisher
American Speech - Language - Hearing Association
Journal
Book Title
Series
Journal of Speech and Hearing Research
J Speech Hear Res
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
0022-4685
EISSN